San Diego Explained: Challenges Facing Massive Fish Farm Project

On this week’s San Diego Explained, Voice of San Diego and NBC 7 San Diego dive into the massive fish farm project and the challenges it’s facing.

The Hubbs-SeaWorld Research Institute is working with a private equity firm to raise 11 million pounds of fish in cages about four and a half miles off of San Diego, California.

It’s the most ambitious aqua-culture project of its kind in the United States.

Project managers of Rose Canyon Fisheries told the San Diego Business Journal that permitting to place submersible cages 4.5 miles west of Mission Beach will take 12 to 18 months to complete.

The vast majority of seafood Americans eat comes from another country. This project, and others like it, could help Americans decrease their reliance on foreign fish and provide local jobs.

But the project is facing criticism.

The San Diego water department is worried about the amount of waste created by millions of fish and how that waste might impact its efforts to monitor water quality near a sewage treatment plant in Point Loma.

The U.S. Navy has said it’s concerned about the fish farm interfering with operations.

There are other problems, too: Hubbs has a much smaller fish breeding operation in Carlsbad and some fish spawned as part of that effort have horns, deformed hearts or are blind.

On this week’s San Diego Explained, Voice of San Diego and NBC 7 San Diego dive into the massive fish farm project and the challenges it’s facing.

Contact Us